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obligation to promote the right to housing (except perhaps for the
non-discrimination element dealt with in the International Convention on the
Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination). That insistence is
legitimate, even if some would question its appropriateness. It is, however,
an entirely different matter to deny the existence of one of the
internationally recognized human rights and to oppose all reference to it,
even in a non-binding recommendation by an international conference.
16.
For these reasons, I believe that the Commission on Human Settlements
should unequivocally reject any suggestion that the right to adequate housing
is not a human right. I would also add that the Committee on Economic, Social
and Cultural Rights has recently noted (E/1995/L.21, para. 10) that it is
essential to ensure "that the general policy framework for the [Habitat II]
Conference takes full account of the importance" of the right to adequate
housing. While it has occasionally been suggested that such matters should be
dealt with only by the Commission on Human Rights and not by bodies such as
the Commission on Human Settlements, this is directly contrary to widely
accepted views that human rights cannot be quarantined and confined to a very
small segment of the overall debate. Neither the Commission on Human Rights
nor the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights has any significant
operational role or capacity, nor do they have any direct inputs into
discussions on housing policy. It is therefore indispensable that this matter
be addressed by the Commission on Human Settlements and by Habitat to the
fullest appropriate extent.
17.
I would be grateful if you could make this letter available to the next
Preparatory Committee meeting and to any other pertinent meetings.
Yours sincerely,
Philip Alston,
Chairperson, Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights